[lbo-talk] Re: techno terror vs humans

C. G. Estabrook galliher at uiuc.edu
Thu Aug 25 13:25:06 PDT 2005


[Chomsky has long argued that the US didn't really lose the Vietnam War, as below. That seems to me correct. --CGE]

The US succeeded brilliantly in its major war aims, though it didn't attain its maximal goal of conquering Vietnam. The major goals throughout were to prevent the "virus" of "radical nationalism" from "infecting" other reasons (to use the terminology that appeals to high planners) by the demonstration effect of successful development -- the rational version of the "domino theory." That goal was achieved.

Indochina was demolished, with maybe 5 million corpses and huge destruction. The surrounding areas were "inoculated" with vicious and murderous dictatorships. By the early '70s, the business press recognized that the US had basically won the war (that was my view then as well; wrote about it at the time). To call the war a "failure" is to assume that anything less than achievement of maximal goals is a failure. An interesting conception, and it's an interesting sign of US ideological power that the left and peace movement not only accept the standard view but regard it as uncontroversial.

---- Original message ----
>Date: Thu, 25 Aug 2005 15:52:42 -0400
>From: Doug Henwood <dhenwood at panix.com>
>...
>But did the US really lose the Vietnam War?



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